Wildlife warrior dedicates his life to animals

What inspires me: I’ve always been rather taken with a quote I believe came from American anthropologist Margaret Mead: “Never doubt that a small group of committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.”

Best advice: Don’t fall prey to over thinking things or using uncertainty as a reason to not act. There is so much we can do today and tomorrow and the day after that. Waiting for the time to be right, to be certain is folly. The multifarious problems of the world and the suffering of its inhabitants are happening now and they need our attention similarly. At the same time remember to think where you can, lest we behave thoughtlessly.

Leo Biddle is dressed in black – black hiking pants, black boots and a black singlet. He’s just put out a cigarette and skulled the dregs of his strong black coffee. Shunning food – Leo says he gets the bulk of his calorie intake from beer – he strides into the jungle at Matang Wildlife Reserve in Sarawak Borneo.

Pressing deeper into the filtered green light of the trees, Leo speaks to the tour group following him in rapid-fire sentences. He’s a walking encyclopaedia of biological information. His razor sharp intellect proffers fascinating insights into animal behavioural science, occasionally veering into philosophy, and always bringing the conversation back to considering conservation from a place of non-judgement, intent and consciousness.

Leo has dedicated his life to wildlife rescue. He manages Matang, rescuing and rehabilitating animals with the hopeful intent of releasing them into the wild. He raises money for wildlife conservation through the charity he founded and directs, Project Orangutan. He leads a team of volunteers to care for the animals. And he takes the opportunity to educate tourists about the realities of wildlife rescue and rehabilitation. There are no rose-coloured glasses for Leo’s guests. Simply the sometimes bleak and sobering reality of working to save animals racing towards extinction.

Hanging out at Matang Wildlife Reserve.

The beginnings

Later, over another strong black coffee and cigarette, Leo admits to charging into wildlife rescue quite by accident. He’d graduated from university early, having been fast-tracked through high school. He’d started a security company in the UK, working at night clubs and at events. When a mate signed up to volunteer with Médecins Sans Frontières in Rwanda during the height of the genocide in 1994, Leo signed up too. He’d use his security company to protect his mate and the other volunteers. And he’d get to enjoy a whole new experience while he was at it.

Leaving the grey skies of the UK behind him, Leo touched down on an airstrip in Rwanda. He was 18 years old. Within hours of arrival he was handed a shovel. His task? Digging mass graves for piles of dead human bodies. “I found it was impossible to see that and go back to a normal life,” Leo says taking a deep drag on his cigarette. “I could never have been comfortable in my own skin if I didn’t do something to help.”

“I could never have been comfortable in my own skin if I didn’t do something to help.”

Gung ho beginnings

As the turmoil in Rwanda eased, Leo began providing security for other causes. He lent his expertise to the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International’s Karisoke Research Centre and was so taken with their work that he began making ongoing donations. Soon though, he also began to establish his own group to investigate the illegal wildlife trade and thwart poachers.

Over time, and between stints back to the UK to earn money, Leo became something of a freelance wildlife trafficking investigator. He’s reluctant to divulge the details of this work, saying only he did what needed to be done to provide the information necessary to prosecute illegal wildlife traffickers.

He remembers being particularly invested in work to save chimpanzees. At the time the threat of HIV AIDS was sounding alarm bells across the globe and medical facilities scrambled to understand the condition. They needed subjects on which to test treatments. Their preferred test subjects? Chimpanzees.

Leo threw himself into investigating the networks that enabled the trade in chimpanzees. He shakes his head with wry amusement at his youthful conviction to the cause. “I was so much younger and dumber then,” he says. “Young taller males like I was like to beat our chest to find our place in the world. But as you get older you become less morally absolute. You realise we all have goodness and evil in us. You can’t judge Australians for eating steak any more than you can judge Congolese for eating bush meat – it’s food. It’s what we do. I am less certain of everything as I get older. That’s been a life lesson for me.”

“You can’t judge Australians for eating steak any more than you can judge Congolese for eating bush meat – it’s food. It’s what we do.”

Maturing

Key to learning such a lesson was the time Leo spent with wildlife champions such as Jane Goodall and Ian Redmond, famed for their work with chimpanzees and gorillas respectively. He casts his mind back to remember conversations and time spent with such inspirational people. “I remember being in awe of individuals from different countries in difficult circumstances attempting to put these animals back into the wild,” Leo says. “I was too definite. I was, if you’re wearing fur you’re an arsehole. But I was lucky enough to spend time with people like Jane and Ian who opened me up to realise the immense complexities behind these issues.”

As Leo matured, he came to work in gorilla tourism. Convinced that tourism was not in the best interest of the animal, Leo sought to lessen the impact tourists visiting the ‘gorillas in the mist’ would have on the gorillas they encountered.

He started to earn a reputation for his work and, in 2006, was invited to Sarawak Borneo for a six-day trip to provide advice on great ape conservation. “I took it up as a free holiday,” Leo says in his typically self-deprecating manner. “I didn’t get paid but there was a hotel and a flight and I’d never been to Borneo. And they had this model of tourism that I didn’t agree with, in which tourists are allowed to kiss and cuddle and play with baby orangutans. Getting a photo with a baby orangutan is just wrong. It habitualises them to humans, it aids disease transfer and it means they associate humans with food so, when they get big and strong and try to take food from humans, they are killed or put back into a cage.”

A dominant male at Matang deemed unable to released into the wild.

Raising hackles

It wasn’t long before Leo raised the hackles of those he met with his strong views against animal tourism. Fed up, a manager at Matang Wildlife Reserve challenged him to do it better. Leo took up the challenge. And he remains at Matang more than 12 years later walking the tightrope between raising money through tourism, and providing real help to native animals.

While experiencing success in stamping out ‘cuddle an orangutan’ experiences and successfully releasing many creatures back into the wild, Leo was upset to realise that many of the animals at Matang will never be released.

Watching the orangutans in the fenced enclosure before him, he tells a tour groups that highly intelligent creatures like orangutans quickly become habitualised to humans. Release them and they are likely to return to humans for food – an act that can have fatal consequences for the animal. Instead, those animals who’ve been in human contact are often condemned to spend out their days in captivity. While Leo and his team offer an ‘enrichment’ program in which they provide activities and entertainment for the orangutans daily, it’s no substitute for life in the wild.

And, even if animals are suitable for release, there is little habitat left in which to release them. The national park surrounding Matang is already home to more orangutans than it can handle. And other areas are fast shrinking for developments and agriculture.

Leo shakes his head in disappointment and moves a group of tourists to the next animal enclosure. And yet he takes pains to ensure his guests don’t judge locals harshly. He urges them to consider views from a different perspective. For some locals, killing an orangutan is no different to Australians killing kangaroos or another pest threatening their crops. And, he reminds the group to consider how far they would go if it came to life and death and a matter of feeding your family.

While Leo despairs at not achieving enough, he says he could never give up on the animals in his charge. And not just orangutans, but sun bears, hornbills, and a whole suite of other creatures rescued from the pet trade, from restaurants, from burning habitats and other abuse. Moving from one enclosure to the next he points out individual creatures and relays their stories. He points out Shirley the infamous, former chain-smoking orangutan who, before her rescue, would smoke up to 200 cigarettes a day to the amusement of tourists at a popular zoo on the mainland.

“I feel a huge responsibility to these animals,” Leo says. “I would not feel comfortable leaving and going home without knowing their future. What would happen here? What if their food ran out? The problem is still here and we have more and more animals coming in.”

The sad sight of Shirley smoking a cigarette before her rescue.

Downside

Such dedication to the animals has come at a cost. Leo knows the stress, and the consequent intake of cigarettes and alcohol, have taken their toll on him personally. “I assumed I’d have a wife and a family,” he says. “I assumed I’d be around to help my parents when they got older. Without playing the violin, you do question why you’re doing it. A lot of my colleagues have suffered and had crippling breakdowns, or got into substance abuse. And despite our best efforts over the past 13 years of my life, the orangutan population is still going down.”

So why do it? “I’ve committed to helping these animals,” Leo says. “These animals can live to 50 to 70 years – it would be churlish to rescue an animal and leave it before you’re sure it’s going to be ok.”

And then there are the individual animals which have captured his heart. Leo’s eyes soften as he speaks of hand rearing a sun bear rescued from the pet trade at just two weeks old. He’d sleep on the floor of the veterinary surgery where she was housed to tend to her needs. He’d place the bear up his jumper to keep her warm. And, he’d sing her lullabies and other songs to bring her comfort. Once the sun bear escaped. Leo simply sang out ‘Amazing Grace’ into the jungle and she, recognising the voice that had comforted her so often, bounded back to greet him. “The one-on-one time with the animals is the best part of the job,” he smiles. “But it’s not best for the animal.”

Leo and a sun bear.

Playing favourites

Pressed to reveal his favourite orangutan, Leo (after being assured the matriarch orangutan Doris will never be allowed to read this article) admits to being smitten by a female called Chiam. “She’s super bright and I like to think we have a level of understanding between us,” Leo says. Once a young orangutan named Ting Sang became dangerously lost in the park during her rehabilitation. As the orangutan was too young to survive on its own, Leo attempted her rescue. However, after three days of searching, they found no sign of Ting Sang. Until Leo had an idea. He went to Chiam.

“Chiam had a record of biting tourists so we couldn’t release her into the park,” Leo says. “And she’s come to understand vocal commands. So I’d say ‘can I have…’ and she’d bring what I requested. In this case I said ‘can I have Ting Sang’ and, taking a big risk, I let her out of the cage to find him and she stormed out into the jungle.”

The next morning, as they prepared to continue their search at dawn, Leo heard a screaming in the forest. He looked up to see Ting Sang racing through the treetops, screeching and swinging back towards the enclosure. Chiam had found the youngster and brought him back. So it broke Leo’s heart when he had to lead Chiam back into her cage. “I’m sad to say she’s still in that cage today,” he says.

Staying sane

While stressed and saddened at the overall outlook for Malaysian wildlife, Leo says it’s the work with individual animals that keeps him sane. “On a microscale you can save individual animals – that’s what keeps you going,” he says.

Leo also relays successes with many animals. There was the orangutan rescued from its owner with a chain embedded deep in its neck. While it suffered damage to its spinal cord, the orangutan survives today thanks to veterinary care. Or there’s the orangutan they rescued at just four weeks old, burns scarring its tiny body and three bullet wounds in its chest. Incredibly the animal survived and went through Matangs’ rehabilitation program to the point it is now deemed ready for release. There’s the pangolin rehabilitation project in which this anteater – the most highly trafficked creature in the world – has been successfully released back into the wild. Or the GPS tracking of the giant Malay turtle which is providing new insights into the lives of these gentle giants. The list of successes goes on.

Leo addresses a tour group at Matang.

Collaboration

Leo also sees value in working together with other charities, supporting local efforts and nurturing a future generation of game changers. Which is why Project Orangutan also supports other charities working to make a difference. And he believes in the power of education to bring about change. “It can be hard to see hope sometimes,” Leo says. “So we need to work together and collaborate. We need some game changers. We need to teach people to bring about behavioural change – knowledge is not enough, it’s a change in behaviour that will make a difference.”

Leaning back on his chair, Leo allows himself a smile and a moment of optimism. While professing to feel hopelessness, you can’t help but note his eyes liven at the thought of people working together to save the animals to whom he’s dedicated his life. “When humans work together with a common interest, we can be amazing,” he says. “With education, and collaboration, who knows? Maybe it’s not too late.”

Get involved…

Leo says the most valuable contribution people can make towards Project Orangutan is an investment of time. Which is why he welcomes volunteers to see his work firsthand, and roll up their sleeves to help, at Matang Wildlife Reserve. To find out more, or to make a donation to his cause, visit the website www.projectorangutan.com

Inspired Journeys

We met Leo and saw his work firsthand on an Inspired Journey to Borneo. Find out about joining Inspired Journeys here.

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